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DOWNFALL OF THE PARTHIAN EMPIRE
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Kerkh Slukh (Kirkuk). The final struggle began in the springtime. In a single year the allies invaded Mesopotamia (Seleucia-Ctesiphon district) and Beth Aramaya (to the north), made an unsuccessful attack on Hatra, then overran Beth Zabdai (Zabdicene), and finally invaded Arzun (Arzanene).[1] Vologases V was evidently killed in the fighting, for his last coins are dated 222/23.[2] Artabanus V was defeated and killed about 227, and all his territory, including Media, fell into the hands of Ardashir. The remaining Parthian forces fled to the mountains, where Artabanus' son Artavasdes continued the struggle for some years. Eventually captured, he was executed in Ctesiphon.[3]

Thus ended the Parthian empire, which in truth at this late date was no longer a living organism but was a senile wreck whose ruler had no more power than tradition or his individual prowess could command. The arrival of the Sasanidae brought fresh blood and new inspiration to a world which was sorely in need of such stimulants.

  1. Mšiḥa Zkha, pp. 28 f. (tr. p. 105); Dio Cass. lxxx. 3 f. (Loeb, IX, p. 482) agrees very closely with this Syriac source.
  2. McDowell, Coins from Seleucia, p. 200. For new evidence on early Sasanian chronology see R. Ghirshman, "Inscription du monument de Châpour Ier à Châpour," Revue des arts asiatiques, X (1936), 123–29.
  3. See his coinage, Wroth, Parthia, p. 251, and the statement by Mšiḥa Zkha, p. 29 (tr. p. 105), that the young son of Artabanus was killed by the Persians in Ctesiphon. McDowell, Coins from Seleucia, p. 200, assigns tentatively to Artavasdes a coin bearing the late date of 228/29 which he believes was struck at Seleucia.

    It is planned to treat the rise of the Sasanidae more fully in a future work on their empire.